Acorp 6A815EPD


Acorp 6A815EPD

CPU Interface
Socket-370
Chipset
Intel 815EP
Intel 82815 MCH
Intel 82801BA ICH2
Form Factor
ATX
Bus Speeds

100 / 102 / 105 / 133 / 134 / 137 / 140 / 145 / 150 / 160 MHz

Voltages Supported

Auto Detect

Memory Slots
3 168-pin SDR DIMM Slots
Expansion Slots

1 AGP Slot
5 PCI Slots (5 Full Length)
1CNR Slots

On-board Audio
N/A
BIOS

Award Modular BIOS 6.00PG

The Acorp 6A815EPD is the only SMP we've seen using the Intel i815EP chipset. There is one reason for the lack of such boards - Intel does not officially support SMP operation with the i815EP, although Acorp has obviously shown us that it is possible. Of course, the i815EP has a few inherent disadvantages in the SMP market, most notably the 512MB memory limit, which may be enough for the vast majority of individual users, but simply won't cut it for any powerful server.


The Intel i815 MCH supporting SMP.


The Intel 82801BA ICH2.

The performance of the board is pretty good, showing that SMP runs smoothly on the 6A815EPD. There is quite a bit of space around both CPU sockets, so you should have no problem installing largeer HSF units. On the other hand, the board has only three DIMM slots, which is inline with the chipset spec. Remember that those chipset specs require the dropping back to PC100 memory speeds when using more than 4 banks of memory.

The 6A815EPD was quite stable in our testing under non-overclocked circumstances, but didn't fare too well when it comes time to overclock.. In fact we weren't able to perform any overclocking test on the board, since setting the FSB to 134MHz would cause the system to crash immediately upon boot up. It's a bit odd that a 1MHz FSB overclock would take a board from rock solid to completely unstable, but that's what happened on our evaluation sample.

The board also features a RAID setup, using the same Promise PDC20265R controller we've seen elsewhere to provide RAID 0 and RAID 1 functionality. Like most other boards that use the Promise controller, RAID 0+1 is not available despite the fact that the controller supports it. This is most likely a licensing issue with Promise that is designed to lower the cost of the controller chips.


The Promise IDE RAID controller.

Overall, the 6A815EPD has a lot of promise, but comes out as an average dual Socket-370 motherboard, mainly due to its inability to overclock. The chipset's memory limitations don't help the situation any, although there is no doubt that the 815EP chipset is faster than the other options in this roundup. If you don't plan to overclock and don't need more than 512MB of memory, then the Acorp 6A815EPD is an excellent choice.

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  • yelo333 - Thursday, May 12, 2005 - link

    On the Acorp 6A815EPD page, there is a misspelling:

    largeer

    Just search for it ;)

    Oh, and don't ask me why I'm actually reading such an old article :P
  • 29a - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    I had one of these and a cool thing about it was that the CPUs didn't have to be the same speed.

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